BK7_3 Summer 2001 Vol 7 #3 Water as Commodity
Transcription
BK7_3 Summer 2001 Vol 7 #3 Water as Commodity
0 D F R s T ) BACKGRO SUMMER 2001 VOLUME 7 • NUMBER 3 • SOc Water as CommodjtyJhe Wrong Prescrjptjon MAUDE BARLOW, NATIONAL CHAIRPERSON, COUNCIL OF CANADIANS he world is poised to make crucial and irrevocable decisions about water. When world J leaders and civil society representatives gathered at the tenth Stockholm Water Sym) J posium in August 2000, there was little disagreement about the urgent nature of the water crisis facing the world. All the attendees agreed that the human race has taken water for granted an d massively misjudged the capacity of the earth's water systems to sustain the demands made upon it. Our supply of available fresh water is finite and represents less than half of one percent of the world's total water stock. Thirty-one countries are facing water stress and scarcity and over a billion people lack adequate access to clean drinking water. By consensus, the group recognized the terrible reality that by the ye ar 2025, as much as two-thirds of the world's population will be living with water shortages or absolute water scarcity.' The Stockholm Water Symposium also acknowledged that instead of taking great care with the limited water we have, we are diverting, polluting, and depleting it at an astonishing rate as if there were no reckoningto come. But there is profound disagreement Water as a fundamental right is guaranteed in among those in the "water world," around the Universal Declaration on Human Rights. the nature of the threat and the solution to it. A growing movement of people believe that the imperatives of economic globalizationunlimited growth, a seamless global consumer market, corporate rule, deregulation, privatization, and free trade-are the driving forces behind the destruction of our water systems. These must be challenged and rejected if the world's water is to be saved. continued on page 2 cases, such as the world's 850 free trade zones they either look the other way as environmental Econo mi c g lobalization integrates th e laws are broken and waters are criminally poleconomies of nation-states into a single unified or actually set lower standards in these luted market and carries industrial production to zones than for the rest of the country. new levels. It intensifies natural resource Throughout Latin America and Asia, masexploitation and exacerbates every existing sive industrialization in rural communities is environmental problem. The imperative of affecting the ba lance between humans and globalization is unlimited growth, making it nature. Water use is being diverted from agriimpossible for paliicipating countries to make culture to industry. Huge corporate factories preservation a priority. are moving up the rivers of the Third World, Developing countries have restructured them dry as they go. Agribusinesses sucking their economic systems to pay their debt and growing crops for export are claiming more of export their way to prosperity. destroying both water once used by family and peasant the natural ecosystems and environmental regulafarmers for food self-sufficiency. The global tions. Economic globalization has also resultexpansion in mining and m an ufacturin g is ed in the exp onential increase in the use of 1 increasing the threat of pollufossil fuels, dams and diver, tion of underground water sions, massive transportation supplies and contaminating Under the current systems needed to carry out th e aquifers that provide global trade, and roads carved system of market-driven mo r e than 50 percent of out of wilderness. In the globeconomic globalization, domestic supplies in most al market, running out of a there are no limits placed Asian countries. local resource can be quickly To fe e d th e vo r acious on where capital can go rectified: when East Coast cod glob al consumer market, to 'harvest' nature. are d epleted, we just move on China h as transformed its to Chilean sea bass. entire economy, massively In the new economy, everydiverting water use from communities and thing is for sale, even those areas of life once local farming to its burgeoning industrial secconsidered sacred, like seeds and genes, cultor. As the big industrial wells consume more ture and heritage, food, aif, and water. As never water, millions of Chinese farmers have found before in history, the public space, the vital comtheir local wells pumped dry. Eighty percent of mons of knowledge and our natural heritage, China's major rivers are now so degraded, they has been hijacked by the forces of private greed. no longer support fish. Economic globalization As environmental leader Paul Hawken says, and the policies that drive it are proving to be "Given cu rrent corporate practices, not one totally unsustainable. wildlife reserve, wilderness, or indigenous culture will survive the global economy. We know THE WATER TRANSNATIONAL$ that every natural system on the planet is disThis leads to a second area of potential disintegrating. The land, water, air, and sea have agreement, the role of transnational corporabeen functionally transformed from life-suptions in determining the future of water. Just porting systems into repositories for waste. as governments are backing away from their There is no polite way to say that business is regulatory responsibilities, giant transnationdestroying the world." al water, food, energy, and shipping corporaIn the race to compete for foreign direct tions are acquiring control of water through investment, countries are stripping their envithe ownership of dams and waterways. These ronmental laws and protection of natural corporations are gaining control over the burresources, including water p rotection. In some ECONOMIC GLOBALIZATION 2 I )